School of Arts (Journal Articles)

Permanent URI for this collectionhttps://hdl.handle.net/10539/37882

Browse

Search Results

Now showing 1 - 2 of 2
  • Thumbnail Image
    Item
    Digestible memories in South Africa’s recent past: processing the Slave Lodge Museum and the memorial to the enslaved
    (Taylor and Francis Group, 2021-07) Cloete, Nicola
    Given the recent oppressive histories of apartheid and colonialism, the legacies of slavery in South Africa are often overlooked in thinking about aspects of post-apartheid democracy’s discursive formulation of race, nation, and reconciliation. This paper analyses how two examples in Cape Town – the permanent exhibition Representing Slavery at the Slave Lodge Museum and the Memorial to the Enslaved in Church Square – represent the historic event of slavery in South Africa. The paper argues that the museum exhibition and the memorial site are instances of memorialisation and simultaneously function as political processes that offer insight into discourses of race and reconciliation in South Africa during the early stages of democracy.
  • Thumbnail Image
    Item
    Women Screenwriters: South Africa
    (2014-08-31) Ebrahim, Haseenah
    Emerging from this research undertaken to map the presence of women screenwriters in the South African film industry, are two significant findings: first, an awareness that while a few women of colour have begun to enter the filmmaking sector, they remain at the margins of the mainstream film industry, writing primarily for documentaries and short films and, secondly, the complete absence of black African women screenwriters. The reasons for this are unclear, and suggest that further research is warranted into the structural factors that continue to hamper the participation of women of colour – and black African women, in particular – in the film industry in South Africa, other than as actresses.